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Journal ArticleDOI

Mental distress and quality of life in a deaf population.

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TLDR
Although a poorer quality of life and a higher level of mental distress are demonstrated, the similarity to the general population in the domain social relationships shows that this does not affect all domains.
Abstract
High risks of mental illness within the deaf community are reported. The assessment of the level of mental distress and quality of life in the deaf community is difficult due to communication problems in spoken and written language. The deaf community is characterized by the use of sign language. A new measure of acceptable reliability using sign language is described. The interactive computerised package including special versions of the World Health Organisation's Brief Quality of Life questionnaire (WHOQOL-BREF), the 12-Item General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12) and five subscales of the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) was administered to a large community sample of deaf people (n=236), and results were compared with normative data for German-speaking hearing people. The deaf sample has a significantly poorer quality of life than the general population for the physical and psychological domains (p<0.01) as measured by the WHOQOL-BREF. However, in the domain of social relationships, no significant difference (p=0.19) was demonstrated. All findings with the GHQ-12 and the BSI show much higher levels (p=0.01) of emotional distress among the deaf. Although a poorer quality of life and a higher level of mental distress are demonstrated, the similarity to the general population in the domain social relationships shows that this does not affect all domains. These findings show the need for easily accessible health services for the deaf which offer sensitive communication with them.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mental health of deaf people

TL;DR: There are discrepancies between a high burden of common mental health disorders and barriers to health care and improved access to health and mental health care can be achieved by provision of specialist services with professionals trained to directly communicate with deaf people and with sign-language interpreters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical practice: The approach to the deaf or hard-of-hearing paediatric patient.

TL;DR: The communication challenges and medical, ethical and legal issues a physician can experience when faced with deaf or severely hard of hearing patients are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

What You Don't Know Can Hurt You: The Risk of Language Deprivation by Impairing Sign Language Development in Deaf Children.

TL;DR: This commentary synthesizes research outcomes with signing and non-signing children and highlights fully accessible language as a protective factor for healthy development through a fully-accessible first language foundation such as sign language.
Journal Article

Psychological profile and social behaviour of working adults with mild or moderate hearing loss.

TL;DR: In this article, an assessment was made of the global assumption that working adults with mild to moderate sensorineural hearing loss experience more negative emotional reactions and socio-situational limitations than subjects with no hearing problems and that a deterioration of health-related quality of life on these specific domains would occur.

Psychological profile and social behaviour of working adults with mild or moderate hearing loss Il profilo psicologico e il comportamento sociale del soggetto adulto affetto da ipoacusia lieve o moderata

D. Monzani
TL;DR: It is concluded that Audiology Services should improve their diagnostic ability by exploring more areas of hearing-impaired subjects concerns in order not to overlook their potentially reduced psychosocial well-being.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the World Health Organization WHOQOL-BREF Quality of Life Assessment

TL;DR: The WHOQOL-Bas discussed by the authors as discussed by the authors is an abbreviated version of the WHOQol-100 quality of life assessment, which produces scores for four domains: physical health, psychological, social relationships and environment.
Journal Article

Development of the World Health Organization WHOQOL-BREF quality of life assessment. The WHOQOL Group.

J Orley, +1 more
TL;DR: It is envisaged that the WHOQOL-BREF will be most useful in studies that require a brief assessment of quality oflife, for example, in large epidemiological studies and clinical trials where quality of life is of interest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender and health: an update on hypotheses and evidence.

TL;DR: The paper organizes the hypotheses proposed for male-female differences in physical health status, therapeutic health behaviors, and longevity and it summarizes empirical research, especially sociological research, on the topic over the past 10-15 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Meta-Analytic Study of Social Desirability Distortion in Computer- Administered Questionnaires, Traditional Questionnaires, and Interviews

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis of social desirability distortion compared computer questionnaires with traditional paper-and-pencil questionnaires and face-to-face interviews in 61 studies (1967-1997; 673 effect sizes).
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